Amazon.co.uk Review
One of the ironies of football in the 90s is that as hooliganism has
apparently withered, helping to pave the way for the game's economic
boom, books about it have been as lucrative and successful as
Manchester United.
In recent years ex-hooligans have cashed in with numerous
tomes, generally recounting with some nostalgia the riots and rucks
of the 70s and 80s.
Martin King, one of Chelsea's violent devotees for 20 years,
has already followed in the footsteps of Colin Ward and the Brimson
brothers with one bestseller recalling his vicious past,
Hoolifan.
In The Naughty Nineties he is re-united with co-writer
and fellow Chelsea fan Martin Knight for more recollections of
warring mobs, smashed-up pubs and mobile rucks on the London
Underground.
Despite its title, many of the recollections date from before
the 1989 Hillsborough disaster, in which 96 fans died, and the
revolution in policing and stadia safety which it ushered in.
In fact, it's often hard pinpoint any firm date for most of
the tales King tells as he avoids specifics, even specific seasons,
in favour of glass-smashing, punch-throwing, often blood-flowing
action.
For anyone who has read any of the similar hooligan diaries,
the style will be familiar: chapters about fights with "crews" from
various other clubs, told in often explicit detail and extreme
language.
King deploys a well-trodden defence of hooliganism: that the
"crews" only confronted other willing pugilists. But he also reveals
the reality in several episodes in which innocent fans and
bystanders became victims.
His other sporadic attempts at analysing or explaining
hooliganism are sometimes equally contradictory--for example he both
blames the media for exaggerating the extent of hooliganism and also
deliberately underestimating it.
But no-one has ever bought a book by an ex-hooligan for its
thoughtful insight. Instead the public relies on the likes of King,
and his former partners-in-crime, to report from the frontline of a
phenomenon which has been, to a large extent, at least driven away
from the sport and its stadia. And on those terms at least King can
claim another result. --Nick Varley
Synopsis
Football has reinvented itself. As television money has poured into
the game, the traditional working class fans have poured out. Not by
choice but by economic necessity. Their places on the terraces have
been replaced by posh seats and those in charge of the game are
especially proud that, according to them, the football hooligan has
at last been eliminated from the landscape. But how true is this
much-vaunted theory? Martin King, author of "Hoolifan", his account
of 30 years of being in and around the notorious Chelsea gangs of
the 1960s, 70s and 80s, brings his story up-to-date in this book.
Ironically, he finds that although football hooligans are now a
minority, their maturity, experience and dedication are higher than
ever. The firms are smaller but far more dangerous. The style and
character of the mobs have changed as has the author, who finds
himself evolving from participant to observer as the decade wears
on. Despite the picture painted by the media of soccer violence in
previous decades, only in the 1990s is it truly highly organized.
Most of the confrontations occur away from stadiums, sometimes on
days when no matches are being played, so King questions whether
"football hooliganism" is in fact the correct description for such
activity. |